Robert Arthur Broinowski: Clerk of the Senate, Poet, Environmentalist, Broadcaster

Robert Arthur Broinowski: Clerk of the Senate, Poet, Environmentalist, Broadcaster

Robert Arthur Broinowski: Clerk of the Senate, Poet, Environmentalist, Broadcaster Richard Broinowski ORN IN MELBOURNE on 1 December 1877, Robert Arthur Broinowski was the sixth of Beight children of a Polish refugee, Gracjusz Josef Broinowski, and his wife, Jane Smith, the daughter of an English whaling ship captain. In Australia, Gracjusz became a prominent explorer and artist and teacher, whose speciality was Australian mammals and birds. He was a friend of Adam Lindsay Gordon and Edmund Barton. From all accounts, he identified strongly with his adopted home and its unification in Federation, and he passed his values and his intellectual curiosity onto his children. As his son Robert wrote to a friend in 1924, ‘my father was a Pole, whose life was full of interest, who was a man of culture and wide knowledge, and who encouraged me to pursue the things that really matter’.1 Robert Broinowski was only four when his father moved from Melbourne to Sydney in 1880. Most of his brothers were educated at the new Jesuit school of St Ignatius at Riverview, but after attending Milson’s Point Primary School, he was sent to another newly-established Jesuit school, St Aloysius, first situated in Woolloomooloo, then in Surry Hills. Many teachers at St Aloysius had no degree or educational qualifications, or the skills to communicate with pupils. Harsh physical punishment was rife. Yet Broinowski came through with a solid educational grounding, although not with any religious convictions. He seems to have remained free of these throughout his life. Two recollections of Broinowski’s youth in Sydney showed his love of historical events, and encouraged his growing vocation for public service. One was the parade he witnessed in 1885 outside his father’s front door in Macquarie Street, of the New South Wales contingent marching off to the Sudan War—’The Soudan Contingent’. The other was his participation as a spectator in the ceremony in Sydney’s Centennial Park on 1 January 1901 when the 1 Quoted in Australian Dictionary of Biography, vol. 7. 68 Robert Arthur Broinowski: Clerk of the Senate, Poet, Environmentalist, Broadcaster Governor General declared Australia a Commonwealth. Both were described in detail in ABC Radio broadcasts he made following his retirement. Broinowski’s first job, obtained without university education, but with the help of his father’s friend Edmund Barton, was as a clerk in the fledgling Department of Defence in Melbourne. He joined on 10 February 1902, and remained until 24 January 1907, when he became Private Secretary to the Minister of Defence, T.T. Ewing. He served as Private Secretary for four years—to Ewing, and then to his two successors Sir Joseph Cook and Sir George Foster Pearce (the latter for two periods—in the first Fisher Ministry from November 1908 to June 1909, and in the second Fisher Ministry in 1910 and 1911). He accompanied his ministers, especially Senator Pearce, on many of their travels in Australia, including going with Pearce to greet the first RAN vessels, the torpedo-boat destroyers Yarra and Parramatta, on their arrival in Perth from England. Broinowski also wrote speeches and press releases. For Pearce, he always carried in his luggage the current Commonwealth Year Book and latest Hansards. Armed with Broinowski’s research, Pearce felt he could handle any press query or win any argument in the Senate.2 On 1 March 1911, Broinowski resigned from Sir George Pearce’s office and was appointed to the staff of the Senate as a clerk and shorthand writer. Federal Parliament had by now been in the Victorian Parliament House in Spring Street, Melbourne for ten years since Federation. During this period, the first eight federal ministries (those of Barton, Deakin, Watson, Reid/McLean, Deakin, Fisher, Deakin and Fisher again) had put together fundamental legislation to run the new Commonwealth, and procedures to make the nascent Parliament work. And for the first time since Federation, a ministry, the second Fisher ministry, enjoyed majorities in both Houses, and thus the strength to push through more legislation. Broinowski joined a group of 53 parliamentary staff, divided between five departments— those of the Senate, the House, the Library, Hansard, and the Joint House (responsible for amenities and catering). The principal characteristics of the parliamentary bureaucracy were, and remained throughout Broinowski’s time, order, respect for the status quo, a measured progression through the hierarchy, and a heavy emphasis on the importance of apprenticeship. Promotion depended on seniority and knowledge of parliamentary practice, which had nowhere been written down. The powers of the two Clerks of the Houses were significant, due to their ability to influence members and senators through the advice they gave. Broinowski’s career, as a committed parliamentary man, reflected these traits. From short- hand writer he was promoted to Clerk of Papers on 1 July 1915, and then to Usher of the Black Rod, Clerk of Committees and Accountant of the Senate on 28 August 1920. At the beginning of May 1927, Robert moved from Melbourne with all other parliamentary staff to Canberra when Parliament was relocated there, and was present in his capacity as Usher of the Black Rod for the opening of the new Parliament House by the Duke of York on 9th of that month. From 30 December 1930 until 31 December 1938 he was Clerk Assistant and Secretary of the Joint House Department, and from 1 January 1939 until his retirement on 30 2 Peter Heydon, Quiet Decision: a Study of George Foster Pearce, Melbourne University Press, Carlton, Vic., 1965. 69 November 1942, Clerk of the Senate. As Clerk of Committees, he acted as secretary to a number of select committees, one of the most important of which, under the chairmanship of Senator R.D. Elliott, inquired into the whole parliamentary committee system and its value. Although there is little on the record about his concrete achievements in procedural matters, there is much anecdotal evidence that in all these capacities, Broinowski was efficient and effective. He had many friends among parliamentarians, and was respected as a man of sound judgment and erudition. His advice was often sought on matters substantial as well as procedural. On matters of protocol, he was also accomplished.3 But Broinowski was also conscious that his position as adviser, helper and enabler to parliamentarians was sensitive, to be handled always with discretion. He tried not to be in the spotlight. As he wrote to a literary friend, Kate Baker, on 5 September 1917, ‘in the corner where I am, a man must keep out of politics, although he is surrounded by them. I may stand in the centre of the merry go round, but I must never ever ride on the horses.’4 He also had the reputation of being a fierce defender of Senate dignity and procedure. He was, as Gavin Souter described him in Acts of Parliament, ‘a stickler about formality and propriety … a quirky amalgam of sophistication, erudition and severity … [who] did not shrink from such unpopular decisions as banning poppy-sellers from the precincts on Remembrance Day, and stopping parliamentary staff from playing ping-pong’, inspiring C.J. Dennis, in 1930, to write of him the following verse: Oh, his brows were wreathed with thunder as he gazed in stupid wonder, As he heard the sinful pinging and the sacrilegious pong. And he said, ‘Henceforth I ban it. If I knew who ’twas began it I would have him drawn and quartered, for ’tis obviously wrong.’ Then back adown the corridors, unbending as a god, Went the adamantine Usher of the Big Black Rod.5 3 As secretary to Defence ministers, Broinowski had been required to handle visits by senior visitors and ships. He made all the arrangements, for example, to receive Australia’s first RAN units in Perth, Parramatta and Yarra. He carried this experience into Parliament, and looked after the Duchess of York at the opening of the new Parliament buildings in 1927. He was also responsible for all arrangements for a visit to Canberra of the Duke of Gloucester in 1934. 4 Broinowski Papers, MS 599, National Library of Australia. 5 Gavin Souter, Acts of Parliament, Melbourne University Press, Carlton, Vic., 1988, p. 262. 70 Robert Arthur Broinowski: Clerk of the Senate, Poet, Environmentalist, Broadcaster Another portrait of him, this time as Clerk, came from the pen of Daily Telegraph journalist Richard Hughes, in an article following the Senate’s disallowance in June 1942 of a regulation permitting the sale of beef from the Werribee Sewerage farm in Victoria. Headed ‘Those meddlesome old men of the Senate’, the article called the Senate ‘a comfortable Home for Old Men’, whose real ruler was not the President ‘with his verandah of rare hair which sheltered his forehead in mute protest against the absence of a wig’, but the Clerk, Broinowski, who was described as ‘a thin querulous fellow, with a beaky nose, light, angry eyebrows, and a small wig. He hisses acid instructions and advice to the timid senators like a bad-tempered stage prompter.’ As a result of the article, Hughes and four other Consolidated Press journalists were banned from Parliament House for several months.6 As Clerk, Broinowski narrowly failed to defend the dignity of Parliament by having another journalist banned, a photographer from the Daily Telegraph, for hiring an elephant from a local circus and snapping it with its head inside the entrance of Parliament House with the caption ‘An elephant looks at a White Elephant’. This time the journalist was saved by the sense of humour of the President of the Senate, Sir Walter Kingsmill, who let him off with a warning over a whisky.

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